Category: COVID-19 / coronavirus

Preparing for the next pandemic: Why a one-country approach is needed

One needs to look no further than any mainstream news or social media outlet to realize that our public health system and hospitals are overwhelmed. Whether it be the lack of adequate testing reagents to properly monitor the current COVID-19 pandemic o…

Human rights and social inequity issues are magnified by COVID-19  

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is considered a powerful document at present, more than 70 years after it was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly at its 3rd session on December 10, 1948, in Paris, France. Since its creation, it is …

The concerns and considerations of implementing a universal mask policy

America greatly stands to benefit from a universal face mask policy that mandates face coverings in public. Understandably, adoption of such a policy raises concerns, including: Universal public masking will come with an exaggerated sense of security, …

Coronavirus highlights why America needs a national medical license

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed many vulnerabilities in the U.S. health care system. While shortages of safety equipment and ventilators have been widely reported, the shortage of physicians and staff to manage patients in respiratory failure is also…

What’s in a disease name, anyway? Everything.

Spanish Flu. Japanese Encephalitis. Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome. West Nile Virus. Wuhan Virus (and lately, the “Chinese Virus” as many have begun calling the pathogen that causes COVID-19: SARS-CoV-2). What do these names all have in common, yo…

Combating patient isolation: Breast cancer treatment during the COVID-19 pandemic

As a health care system, we have united during the COVID-19 public health threat to embrace social distancing and “flatten the curve.”  In order to conserve scarce resources and limit viral transmission, we health care providers have canceled elective …

How a physician finds laughter during this dark time

As I write this, we are in dark times. Over 23,000 Americans have died from the coronavirus, and there are half a million diagnosed cases – even with testing far from comprehensive. Most cities are on some sort of lockdown. Most of us have become…

Health care workers during the COVID-19 crisis: superheroes or human-heroes?

This essay is for my colleagues. When I say “colleagues,” I am referring to all health care workers who are currently working on the frontlines of the COVID-19 crisis or are engaging in patient care at any level. This might be an unconventional essay c…

You’re just the anesthesiology resident

You always knew they didn’t care about you.  The administration, I mean.  But you knew that going into it.  It’s just four years that you have to endure until you can be respected, until you make the big bucks, until you’re treated like a human being. …

Cowardice in the face of coronavirus

When coronavirus exploded, my family was on vacation in Colorado. We played the news nonstop, and it was frightening. I’m a control freak, a planner, and thus my worries were nonstop. What were other hospitals doing to prepare as compared to my own? Wh…